Article by
Barbados Today

Published on
November 8, 2012

Damage from Guatemala earthquake.
SAN MARCOS, Guatemala — A strong earthquake off the coast of Guatemala killed at least 48 people and trapped others under rubble yesterday, crushing homes and cars, destroying roads and forcing evacuations as far away as Mexico City.
Most of the dead were buried under debris in San Marcos state, a mountainous region near the Mexican border. Landslides triggered by the 7.4-magnitude quake blocked highways and complicated rescue efforts.
It was the strongest quake to hit the Central American nation since 1976, when a 7.5-magnitude quake killed more than 20,000 people.
President Otto Perez, who confirmed the death toll after returning to the capital Guatemala City from a lightning trip to San Marcos, said that as many as 23 people were unaccounted for, while 153 people were being housed in emergency shelters.
“It’s very sad to meet people here who are waiting to find their families who are still buried,” Perez said in San Marcos. “It’s really a tragedy and we will do all we can to help the families that are suffering.”
Rescue workers in bright yellow helmets worked through the night pulling bodies from the rubble-strewn streets of San Pedro Sacatepequez, San Marcos, as dazed locals looked on, taking stock of the damage.
“Thank God we’re alive,” said resident Arnulfo Portillo. “To be honest, there’s quite a few families who have been hit badly, but we’re a tight-knight community and we’ll come out on top.”
In San Cristobal Cucho, also in San Marcos, all but one of an 11-member family died, buried under rubble, volunteer fireman Ovidio Fuentes told local radio. Only the 17-year-old son survived.
Local Red Cross chief Carlos Enrique Alvarado said 75 homes were destroyed in the city of San Marcos alone and authorities said damage to the prison forced them to transfer 101 inmates to another jail.
Perez, who announced three days of mourning, said Spain and Venezuela had offered help. Authorities distributed 16,000 emergency rations and mobilised more than 2,000 soldiers to help with the rescue effort. The energy ministry said 73,000 people were left without electricity.
In Guatemala City, 100 miles from the quake’s epicentre, the streets filled with office workers forced to evacuate buildings, although most soon returned to work. (Reuters)